Evidence gaps among systematic reviews examining the relationship of race, ethnicity, and social determinants of health with adult inpatient quality measures.

Sonali D Advani, Alison G Smith, Ibukunoluwa C Kalu, Reinaldo Perez, Stephanie Hendren, Raymund B Dantes, Jonathan R Edwards, Minn Soe, Sarah H Yi, Janine Young, Deverick J Anderson
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Abstract

Background: The field of healthcare epidemiology is increasingly focused on identifying, characterizing, and addressing social determinants of health (SDOH) to address inequities in healthcare quality. To identify evidence gaps, we examined recent systematic reviews examining the association of race, ethnicity, and SDOH with inpatient quality measures.

Methods: We searched Medline via OVID for English language systematic reviews from 2010 to 2022 addressing race, ethnicity, or SDOH domains and inpatient quality measures in adults using specific topic questions. We imported all citations to Covidence (www.covidence.org, Veritas Health Innovation) and removed duplicates. Two blinded reviewers assessed all articles for inclusion in 2 phases: title/abstract, then full-text review. Discrepancies were resolved by a third reviewer.

Results: Of 472 systematic reviews identified, 39 were included. Of these, 23 examined all-cause mortality; 6 examined 30-day readmission rates; 4 examined length of stay, 4 examined falls, 2 examined surgical site infections (SSIs) and one review examined risk of venous thromboembolism. The most evaluated SDOH measures were sex (n = 9), income and/or employment status (n = 9), age (n = 6), race and ethnicity (n = 6), and education (n = 5). No systematic reviews assessed medication use errors or healthcare-associated infections. We found very limited assessment of other SDOH measures such as economic stability, neighborhood, and health system access.

Conclusion: A limited number of systematic reviews have examined the association of race, ethnicity and SDOH measures with inpatient quality measures, and existing reviews highlight wide variability in reporting. Future systematic evaluations of SDOH measures are needed to better understand the relationships with inpatient quality measures.

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研究种族、民族和健康的社会决定因素与成人住院病人质量衡量标准之间关系的系统性综述中存在的证据差距。
背景:医疗流行病学领域越来越重视识别、描述和解决健康的社会决定因素 (SDOH),以解决医疗质量不平等的问题。为了找出证据缺口,我们研究了近期的系统性综述,探讨了种族、民族和 SDOH 与住院病人质量测量的关联:我们通过 OVID 在 Medline 上检索了 2010 年至 2022 年期间使用特定主题问题对种族、民族或 SDOH 领域和成人住院质量衡量标准进行研究的英文系统性综述。我们将所有引文导入 Covidence (www.covidence.org, Veritas Health Innovation) 并删除重复内容。两名盲审稿人分两个阶段对所有文章进行评估:标题/摘要,然后是全文审阅。结果:在确定的 472 篇系统综述中,有 39 篇被纳入。其中 23 篇研究了全因死亡率;6 篇研究了 30 天再入院率;4 篇研究了住院时间;4 篇研究了跌倒;2 篇研究了手术部位感染 (SSI);1 篇研究了静脉血栓栓塞风险。评估最多的 SDOH 指标是性别(9 例)、收入和/或就业状况(9 例)、年龄(6 例)、种族和民族(6 例)以及教育程度(5 例)。没有系统综述对用药错误或医疗相关感染进行评估。我们发现对其他 SDOH 指标的评估非常有限,如经济稳定性、邻里关系和医疗系统的可及性:有限的系统性综述研究了种族、民族和 SDOH 指标与住院病人质量指标之间的关联,现有的综述强调了报告中的巨大差异。未来需要对 SDOH 指标进行系统评估,以更好地了解其与住院质量指标之间的关系。
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